The agreement, signed at the City Council’s Criminal Justice Committee meeting, means the monitor’s office will have access to the department’s information, be able to collect and analyze data, monitor investigations into officers, attend disciplinary hearings, and monitor critical incidents.

The office is independent from the city, funded through Inspector General Ed Quatrevaux’s office.

“This is a new day in New Orleans,” Quatrevaux said.

Jasmine Groves addressed council. She is the daughter of Kim Groves, a mother of three who was shot in 1994, 48 hours after complaining to the police about Officer Len Davis, whom she had watched pistol-whipping a young man in her neighborhood.

Groves (left, holding a framed picture of her mother), with Hutson (center) and Serpas (right). Serpas joined in a standing ovation for Groves after she had spoken.

Davis got his associate, Paul Hardy, a drug dealer, to kill Kim Groves, and remains on death row as a result.

“We as citizens should not be afraid. We shouldn’t be afraid of the people who should protect and serve us,” Groves said. “I just want her to be remembered. I don’t want her to go down in vain.”

Hutson said the agreement is designed to catch officers like Davis and Dwayne Scheuermann, the lieutenant indicted in the death of Henry Glover, an Algiers man who was allegedly shot and burned by police in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The trial is ongoing in U.S. District Court this week.

“For the Len Davises of this world, the Dwayne Scheuermanns, those who have a lot of complaints, they’re going to trigger this early-warning system,” Hutson said. “And we’re going to catch those.”

Serpas said he’d talked about the Len Davis story all over the country, as something that other departments should learn from.

“We should not think that just because an officer appears to be working good, he’s working good,” Serpas said.

Hutson said the aim of her office is to reverse the community fear engendered by cases such as these.

“During my selection process, I heard over and over and over again how afraid people were to file complaints,” Hutson said.

The monitor’s office aims to provide a trustworthy complaint process, monitoring the department’s early-warning system to look for patterns in risky behavior, and making policy recommendations and reform suggestions. The office has also hired a community outreach specialist to explain the process to the community, too.

Hutson said the agreement could help improve the department’s image across the country. She has heard negative things at police conferences she has attended, she said.

The monitor’s office has already helped the department revamp its use-of-force policies, and impose timelines on its investigation policies. In the future, it wants to look at racial profiling, retaliation investigation, and Fourth Amendment training, Hutson said.

Serpas said he supported the agreement “enthusiastically and without reservation.”

“This department has moved from being, perhaps, reticent, to being open, transparent and collaborative,” Serpas said.

Serpas said he wanted officers to feel comfortable filing complaints against their fellow officers.

“We want to make sure that everyone in this organization recognizes that supporting good behavior makes our community safer,” Serpas said. “You need to be safe coming to internal affairs.”

The chief has received more than 100 phone calls where officers have reported suspicious behavior of other officers, he said.

The committee co-chairwomen agreed that the agreement is a big step forward.

“Reticent is a good word,” Councilwoman Jackie Clarkson said. “No one ever said no. They were always just reticent and it never happened.”

“As recently as last year there was roadblock,” Councilwoman Susan Guidry said. “And to see now that all that has washed away is very, very exciting and it’s an absolute necessity if we’re ever going to gain the trust of our citizenry.”

The Lens asked for a copy of the agreement and will update this post shortly, once the monitor’s office has sent it along.

Criminal justice reform advocates were enthusiastic about the agreement, but sounded a note of caution.

“The key to us, is not just that we have these apparatus, but what are we going to do to sustain them, to keep them fully functional, and to keep them real?” asked civil-rights attorney Mary Howell. “There’s going to have to be a real exchange in the community here, or I’m fearful that we’ll be back here in 10 years having another conversation.”

Davis was one of the most decorated officers in the police department, Howell said.

“Every 10 years the feds come in and prosecute, and we have failed to make the cultural changes to stop these things happening,” Howell said.

Ronald McCoy from Safe Streets Strong Communities said the police are still behaving differently in Uptown neighborhoods compared to poorer areas of the city.

“Where is community policing?” McCoy said. “You’ve got to involve the community in this.”

Safe Streets is the most HYPOCRITICAL non-profit group in the city of New Orleans. They protest the NOPD, they work with the NOPD, they applaud the NOPD, and they condemn the NOPD. They want to
be in every aspect of the city, and no one in the community support these people. They have no support from the black community, so they must be working on behalf of the white community. Yvette Thierry is
a sad excuse of a human being. She confused about what it is they are supposed to be doing.

mg

I believe that calling a respected committed group in the city “hypocritical” should be taken up with them directly, not on a public forum.

When and where has safe streets “applauded” the NOPD without a critique? What are you insinuating by saying they “work with the NOPD”? They continually advocate and support families affected by police violence. They were the most steadfast and organized group when it came to creating the office of the Independent Police Monitor. Is this “work with” by association? Please be more specific when making accusations.

Certainly reforms of a notorious police department culture are not revolutionary, but they can have a de-escalating effect on the real violence perpetrated by police in neighborhoods. And Safe Streets is, and has been, an almost entirely black-run organization with black community leaders and black community involvement in their membership, with a particularly strong base in the Irish Channel and Central City. Due to their politics against police brutality, certainly there are white social justice folks in New Orleans who may work as allies or as volunteers, such as myself. But to say they work on behalf of the white community is insulting to their commitment and politics. Currently, there are two black staff members, both of whom lost relatives to police murder.

Maybe instead of insulting organizers as “confused” and dehumanizing them, we could engage in a constructive conversation about what is to be done? What is your vision? How can we organize to keep the police actually accountable, or reduce the possibility for their violence? Or reduce the perceived need and subsequent justification put forward by the city to have so many officers? As we and other cities have seen, police abuse of power and force against residents, particularly black residents, is difficult to slow down considering that white supremacy continually culturally reinforces the logic of the police system, whether the individual officers are white or black. Even when the FBI comes in, as Howell says in the article, an abusive culture reasserts itself.

Don’t we all want less violence, less killing, whether it’s police-on-resident (god-like abuse of power and access to force) or resident-on-resident (god-like abuse of force, often stemming from economic exclusion or deprivation)? Both are rooted in maintaining social and racial hierarchies with the white wealthy on top, avoiding accountability for their white collar, business crimes — developing segregated neighborhoods and therefore the quality of services, the racist red-lining of real estate financing, life-long job discrimination, or extremely low wages, for arrest records even when not convicted.

We must try to remember our motivations for an equitable society, who is really on what side and work to persuade people to our point of view through our political actions, daily behavior, and constructive critique of each others’ analysis of social change.

At the end of the day, we probably have more in common than we suspect.